Our True LegacyBy Moshe Katz, Israeli Krav International

In "Krav Maga History Interview"
I tried to make the point that we as Jews do not worship idols of any kind and
as such we should avoid the "Imi cult" around the man that many
believe to be the founder of Krav Maga. (I claim he was not the founder as I point out in Krav Maga History).

I used the following line
which a dear friend found confusing and slightly offensive to the Romans.

"We are not the Romans
who were concerned with building statues and preserving one's name for
eternity. We are taught not to worship idols of any kind."

She asked why use a line that
could be seen as offensive to Romans. (make note this is a reference to the ancient
Roman Empire and not to modern Italians living in Rome).

To answer…you must know some
history…

Oh…where to begin. Until the
recent European Holocaust Rome was seen as the very epitome of Evil and the
eternal enemy of the Jewish people. The
very term "Rome" came to be seen as evil itself.

Rome tormented the Jewish
people for at least four centuries. In the first century B.C.E. Rome conquered
Israel and took away its independence. Between the years 70 and 135 Rome
crushed three wars of independence by the Jews and in the process killed close
to 2 million Jews, devastated the country, carried off prisoners to be sold as
slaves or to fight as gladiators to the death, destroyed Jerusalem, and perhaps
worst of all destroyed the Jewish Temple, the center of Jewish life.

During the centuries that
followed the Romans did not allow the Temple to rebuilt. Unlike all other
faiths whose temples were destroyed, the Jews alone were not allowed the privilege of rebuilding their Temple and worshiping in the manner of their forefathers.

Jews around the world had
always paid a special tax for the maintenance of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem, with
the destruction of the Temple the Romans insisted on a new tax from every Jew in the Roman Empire
to maintain pagan temples, rubbing salt into the open wounds of the Jews.

The Romans, up until the 4th
century, were pagans. They worshiped emperors as gods and emperors could create
gods. When Hadrian's lover Antoninus died young Hadrian made a statue of him and
had him worshiped as a god. This was common practice in Rome; making one's
deceased daughter into a god, or military heroes and so on.

For Romans having a statue
to preserve your one's legacy was very important. As such we still find many relics
of this culture even today in Israel; archeological artifacts, statues, graven
images.

The Jews, on the other hand,
were commanded not to make any graven images and to worship only the invisible
God who is everywhere but cannot be seen.

The rabbis teach us that a man's legacy are
his words of wisdom that he leaves behind. When people quote the words of a
deceased scholar we say, "His lips move from the grave". Great men are
not remembered by statues, they are not turned into gods, and they are not to be
worshiped. Rather it is their words of wisdom and their exemplary lives that are
their legacy.

We do not worship stones or
statues, we do not idealize and deify people who lived in the past, but rather
we learn from their lives and the lessons that they taught and we move forward;
we continue to evolve.

Know your History

Are you a Krav Maga instructor?

Do you know your history?

Read the Book, Israel, A Nation of Warriors by Moshe Katz

Now available on Kindle

Over 250 pages, the history of Israel and the Jewish people as a
fighting nation from the days of Abraham to our own times. The book
covers the history and roots of Krav Maga and the modern Israeli Defense
Forces. The book analyzes what makes Israeli security the best in the
world.